"Everything that can be invented has been invented." |
In retrospect, we see how silly was that view. But that is the
nature of scientific certitude. Science is an ongoing process. Things we hold
to be true are only working models of reality, and reality is often more
complex or strange than we think. When our models (theories) disagree with
reality, we must quickly develop new theories.
Science, that is, our view of reality, changes all of the
time. For instance, here are a handful of new theories published in just the last few
months.
- You can literally die of a broken heart. Researchers in the U.K. studied 30,000 people whose spouses had died and found a significant (nearly double) risk of heart attack or stroke. This risk fades in subsequent months and is correlated with higher levels of inflammatory cells in the blood (which gradually return to normal). (JAMA Internal Medicine, April 2014)
- We may have company in other dimensions. Researchers using a sophisticated telescope in Antarctica have for the first time discovered primordial gravitational waves, thus buttressing the case for inflationary expansion. This theory posits that during the first trillionth of a trillionth of a second, the universe expanded from an invisible speck to near its current size. If true, our universe may be “one of many universes floating like bubbles in a glass of champagne.” (Scientific American, March 31, 2014).
- Beans beat beef, but even then in temperance. Two recent studies support a theory that too much protein has negative effects on human health. The primary study found that people age 50-65, with a diet where protein is restricted to 10% of total calories, suffered cancer and diabetes at significantly lower rates. Those eating a moderate protein diet (up to 19%), were three times more likely to die from cancer. Oddly enough, the effect reversed after age 65, when a moderate protein diet seems slightly protective. In good news for vegetarians, vegetable protein was found to be more healthy than animal protein overall. (Cell Metabolism, March 2014)
- Dark skin is evolutionarily superior in the tropics. An English researcher studying 40 years of data found that albinos living in areas of high ultraviolet radiation (e.g., Africa, Central America) contract skin cancer and often die young before reproducing. Theorizing that early hominids were pale skinned and largely hairless (to control body temperature in tropical heat), he proposes that nonmelanoma skin cancers killed the lighter skinned and spared the darker skinned. This evolutionary force self-selected dark skin as a superior attribute for survival. (Proceedings of the Royal Society B, January 2014)
- Death rays may not be just science fiction. Physicists at the University of Maryland have demonstrated a one-two combo punch that opens the way for laser weapons. High power lasers tend to heat the atmosphere as they pass through it. The low-density air thus created acts like a lens, defocusing and weakening the beam. Instead, by pulsing a low-power laser several times over 7 billionths of a second, a “tunnel in the sky” is created through which a high energy blast could follow. In addition to death rays, such technology could be used to power high altitude aircraft. (Physical Review X, February 2014)
Science is constantly evolving, constantly surprising. To
not be open to multiple possibilities is crippling to a scientist. A
close-minded scientist is like a blind marksman; brilliant, perhaps, but unable
to hit a moving target. That is why the most prized scientific quality is a
finely honed sense of skepticism.
A major mistake for a serious scientist is to follow the
herd, but it is oh so hard to resist. Usually grants and funding follow the
herd; taking another path can lead to poverty. Disagreeing with the herd
will also get you shunned, criticized, and sometimes demonized. For instance,
Professor Lawrence Torcello seriously proposes jailing those who disagree with him on climate science.
Here’s a famous example. Dr. Barry Marshall and research partner Robin Warren were all alone in
their thinking. The entire world’s scientific community ridiculed their theory, but
they persevered. Peptic ulcers are caused by bacteria, not spicy foods or
stress. Next time you get a simple antibiotic to cure one, won’t you be glad
that they remained steadfast?
Excellent Article !!
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